fizz·gram
An older woman walking down a long gravel driveway toward a rural mailbox in golden afternoon light.

A photo postcard,
in the mail.

Take a picture. Write a note on the back. fizz·gram prints and mails a real postcard to the people you love who aren't online.

How it works

  1. Pick a photo. From your camera roll, or take a new one. We auto-detect tilt and offer a one-tap level correction.
  2. Add a recipient. Import from Contacts with a tap, or type the address yourself. We verify it through USPS so it actually arrives, and save it for next time.
    Recipient picker showing two saved recipients and options to choose from Contacts or add manually.
  3. Write the message. A few lines on the back. Toggle on what you want printed: a map of where the photo was taken, the date, the time, even the weather that day.
    Message editor with Map, Date, Time, and Weather toggles all enabled, with a real character counter showing 131 of 264.
  4. Hit send. We print, address, and drop it in the mail. You get a real delivery estimate from our print partner, not a guess.
    Postcard front in the compose view, showing the photo composed for a 4x6 postcard.
  5. Call your grandma after she's pulled it from the mailbox. You'll have something to talk about.

What's on the back

The back of every postcard can carry a handwritten-style note, a small printed map of where the photo was taken, the place name, the date, the time, even the weather that day. All optional. Tap to add what feels right.

A sample postcard back: a note to Grandma about the beach, a small map of Samui Island where the photo was taken, the date May 6 2026, the time 12:38 PM, the weather 84°F drizzle, and the recipient's mailing address.
Printed at 300 DPI on heavy stock. Photo and writing both come out crisp, easy on grandma's eyes.

What's a fizz·gram?

A physical telegram. Fizz for the physical, gram for the telegram. The opposite of Instagram — slow instead of instant, paper instead of pixels, for the people you love who aren't on the digital grid.

Why fizz·gram

The people who'd love your photos the most aren't always online: your grandparents, your aunts and uncles, the lovely Luddites we all have in our lives. A postcard from you, in the mailbox, is a small thing that makes a big day.